Net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effect

Bolted connections are willingly used in steel structures because of their easiness of fabrication and assembly, but often they are the weakest component in the construction. In case of tensile lap connections, fracture of net cross section usually determines a joint capacity. Additionally, possible...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bernatowska Edyta, Ślęczka Lucjan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2019-01-01
Series:MATEC Web of Conferences
Online Access:https://www.matec-conferences.org/articles/matecconf/pdf/2019/11/matecconf_krynica2018_09002.pdf
id doaj-e79867c644b543c8ad5b608781e5afc1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e79867c644b543c8ad5b608781e5afc12021-02-02T06:35:54ZengEDP SciencesMATEC Web of Conferences2261-236X2019-01-012620900210.1051/matecconf/201926209002matecconf_krynica2018_09002Net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effectBernatowska EdytaŚlęczka Lucjan0Rzeszow University of Technology, Department of Building StructuresBolted connections are willingly used in steel structures because of their easiness of fabrication and assembly, but often they are the weakest component in the construction. In case of tensile lap connections, fracture of net cross section usually determines a joint capacity. Additionally, possible eccentricities can affect the distribution of stresses in the cross section and hence its load capacity. Analysis of fracture is a completely different issue compared to well-known and established problems of stability or plastic resistance. Paper relates to steel angle tension members connected by one bolt. It starts from the description of experimental investigations which results were used for hierarchical validation of computational models. Choice between two types of material models (elastic-plastic and Gurson–Tvergaard–Needleman) and building of FE models, representing different degrees of complexity, were described. Paper ends with parametric study taking into account influence of the edge distance from the centre of a fastener hole to the adjacent edge of angle. The paper’s aim is to verify and present the methodology for fracture prediction in steel angle tension members, which can be next extended for bolted joints with larger number of bolts and different geometrical configurations.https://www.matec-conferences.org/articles/matecconf/pdf/2019/11/matecconf_krynica2018_09002.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bernatowska Edyta
Ślęczka Lucjan
spellingShingle Bernatowska Edyta
Ślęczka Lucjan
Net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effect
MATEC Web of Conferences
author_facet Bernatowska Edyta
Ślęczka Lucjan
author_sort Bernatowska Edyta
title Net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effect
title_short Net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effect
title_full Net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effect
title_fullStr Net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effect
title_full_unstemmed Net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effect
title_sort net section fracture assessment of steel bolted joints with shear lag effect
publisher EDP Sciences
series MATEC Web of Conferences
issn 2261-236X
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Bolted connections are willingly used in steel structures because of their easiness of fabrication and assembly, but often they are the weakest component in the construction. In case of tensile lap connections, fracture of net cross section usually determines a joint capacity. Additionally, possible eccentricities can affect the distribution of stresses in the cross section and hence its load capacity. Analysis of fracture is a completely different issue compared to well-known and established problems of stability or plastic resistance. Paper relates to steel angle tension members connected by one bolt. It starts from the description of experimental investigations which results were used for hierarchical validation of computational models. Choice between two types of material models (elastic-plastic and Gurson–Tvergaard–Needleman) and building of FE models, representing different degrees of complexity, were described. Paper ends with parametric study taking into account influence of the edge distance from the centre of a fastener hole to the adjacent edge of angle. The paper’s aim is to verify and present the methodology for fracture prediction in steel angle tension members, which can be next extended for bolted joints with larger number of bolts and different geometrical configurations.
url https://www.matec-conferences.org/articles/matecconf/pdf/2019/11/matecconf_krynica2018_09002.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT bernatowskaedyta netsectionfractureassessmentofsteelboltedjointswithshearlageffect
AT sleczkalucjan netsectionfractureassessmentofsteelboltedjointswithshearlageffect
_version_ 1724301031206027264